Regina Leader-Post

FLYING HIGH

Little-known facts about the Eagles

- JEFF DEDEKKER

They’ve sold more than 150 million records, defined the laid-back, country-rock sounds of 1970s Southern California and had more catty drama within their ranks than the eight seasons combined of Desperate Housewives.

The Eagles, or at least some of them, are coming to Regina on May 17 to play Mosaic Stadium as part of the Memorial Cup celebratio­n. When Glenn Frey passed away in 2016, bandmate Don Henley was adamant that the Eagles were finished: “I don’t see how we could go out and play without the guy who started the band,” Henley told Washington Post.

Thankfully, he changed his mind, in no small part because the reborn Eagles now includes Frey’s gifted son Deacon as part of the lineup. “The only way it felt justified to me was to have family blood in the band,” Henley told Rolling Stone Magazine in 2017.

Henley, Joe Walsh and Timothy B. Schmit have been joined by Deacon Frey and country star Vince Gill for the current North American tour.

HERE ARE FIVE FUN FACTS ABOUT THE EAGLES: 1 The Kenny Rogers/Bob Seger connection

The Eagles may define California sound, but neither of its leaders came from the Golden State. Frey was actually from Detroit, a city that birthed raucous, hard-rocking bands that seemed in many ways to be the polar opposite of the Eagles’ peaceful, easy feelings. He even sang backup on Bob Seger’s 1969 garage rocker Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man. Henley is from Texas and was actually brought to Los Angeles by gravelly voiced country-pop superstar Kenny Rogers of all people. At the time, Henley was playing in the band Shiloh. Rogers was a fan and helped get the act a recording contract and relocate to Los Angeles in 1970. Shiloh broke up one year later, paving the way for the Eagles.

2 What exactly is Hotel California about, anyway?

Arguably the Eagles’ most popular song, Hotel California’s cryptic lyrics have been the topic of discussion and debates for decades. Is it an astute comment on California excess and the hedonism in the 1970s, or just bad poetry? Is it about Satan? Heroin addiction? What exactly does colitas smell like? The lyrics were written by Frey and Henley, while Don Felder reportedly wrote the lion’s share of the music. In 2005, Henley told Rolling Stone: “We were all middle-class kids from the Midwest. Hotel California was our interpreta­tion of the high life in L.A.” Frey, however, was often more ambiguous about the epic ballad’s true meaning. At around the same time, he told the BBC News: “Everybody wants to know what that song was about, and we don’t know.”

3 The Big Lebowski

Among the many memorable characteri­stics of The Dude (Jeff Bridges) in the Coen brothers’ 1998 stoner-noir classic was his devotion to CCR and deep hatred of the Eagles. The soundtrack actually contains a Spanish cover of Hotel California by the Gypsy Kings. It also contains Townes Van Zandt’s cover of the Rolling Stones’ Dead Flowers. According to T Bone Burnett, who oversaw the soundtrack, the rights of that song were owned at the time by the Stones’ former manager Allen Klein. He wanted an astronomic­al amount of money for its usage and wouldn’t budge until Burnett showed him a rough cut of the film. Klein apparently softened thanks to the Dude’s musical tastes. According to Rolling Stone, right after watching the Dude famously say ‘I hate the f---king Eagles, man!’ Klein stood up and told Burnett he could have the song.

4 But the Dude loves the Eagles in real life

Glenn Frey apparently did not find the Lebowski slight even slightly amusing and reportedly scolded actor Jeff Bridges, who played the Dude but didn’t write his dialogue, when the two met. The irony is that Bridges is actually a big fan of the Eagles. His daughter, singer-songwriter Jessie Bridges, confirmed this to former Calgary Herald music critic Mike Bell in a 2015 profile. “Oh no, I love the Eagles,” she said. “And my dad loves the Eagles — yup, yup, yup.”

5 The Eagles get the last laugh on the baseball field

In his book Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine, Joe Hagan dedicates a full five pages to the epic baseball battle between the Eagles and staff of Rolling Stone in 1978. At the time, the Eagles were wildly successful but had become the whipping boys of snooty music critics. Frey, who was very competitiv­e, was the one who first challenged the magazine staff. “Anytime you pencil-pushing desk jockeys want to put on your spikes, we’ll kick your ass, too,” he reportedly said. The Eagles clobbered Rolling Stone 15-8. This also won the Eagles a full page in the magazine to “crow about their win,” Hagan writes. The magazine also had to donate $5,000 to UNICEF.

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 ??  ?? The Eagles, comprising Joe Walsh, left, Vince Gill, Deacon Frey, Don Henley and Timothy B. Schmit, will play Mosaic Stadium on Thursday.
The Eagles, comprising Joe Walsh, left, Vince Gill, Deacon Frey, Don Henley and Timothy B. Schmit, will play Mosaic Stadium on Thursday.

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